Chapter 95 â With Great Slowness And Care (1)
âMaybe youâre right, Louise.â
Louisâs father turned regretfully and looked out the window. They were discussing the termination of the contract at the arts center.
âYour anger is justified.â
â⦠No.â
Louise answered calmly, holding back her rising emotions.
âIâm sorry I got so upset. Iââ
âIt is alright to be angry at an injustice. Especially when it involves using oneâs personal connections to interfere with someoneâs business.â
âBut shouldnât I have a cool head like you, Father?â
Mr. Sweeney turned and studied his daughter. She had been growing up lately. It wasnât just her height. Her mind had accumulated a wealth of experience and knowledge, and her eyes carried a look of maturity.
âI donât have a cool head.â
âWhat?â
Not cool? So what was the calmness of his voice after she gave him a summary of the situation?
âIâm just used to it.â
ââ¦â
âThis will happen again in the future, many times.â
âButâ¦itâs so unfair.â
Louise was on the verge of tears again.
âWe have no noble families who officially looks after us. There are many of them regard us as a nuisance.â
For example, someone like Countess Lassen.
âBut the people who graduated from the Academy with your father are all nobles. Theyâre friendly to the greenhouse.â
âYou cannot expect anything from an informal relationship. Itâs an inconvenience for the families.â
âAhâ¦â
Louise understood the difference between a formal and informal relationship. A formal relationship referred to something that was documented on paper, such as marriages. She had heard that most noble families formed long-standing alliances in that way. But Louise was the only person that could marry from the Sweeney greenhouse, as she didnât have any other siblings.
ââ¦Should I make official connections with a family that will help the greenhouse?â
She approached the question carefully, but Mr. Sweeney dropped his book.
âLouise.â
âYes?â
Mr. Sweeney stared at his daughter. It was the same daughter who said âI want to marry my dadâ not too long ago. Exactly 11 years, 3 months and 7 days ago.
âI-I donât care if I have to be on the streets selling flowers. I mean, thatâsâ¦â
He didnât want her to marry for that reason. In the first place, there was no man Mr. Sweeney deemed worthy enough he would leave his daughter to. In the case of the Crown Prince and Simon, it was acceptable, but they were only just a tiny bit better than the others. The difference was about the size of an antâs footprint.
âFather?â
âNo, Iâll work hard.â
âDad?â
âIt does not matter who the man is. He must treat Louise Sweeney like a queen. And after forty hours of rigorous screeningâ¦â
âI donât think even I would pass forty hours of that.â
âDonât worry.â
Mr. Sweeney beamed with pride.
âMy daughter would pass even seventy hours of strict screening.â
Louise stared at her father with a dubious face. She imagined she would unfairly pass the test by just being his daughter.
*
*
*
The rain continued to fall in sheets.
As Louise changed her clothes, she thought for a moment about the original story. Recently she had been observing what was like the original work and not. She wondered if there was a pattern to where events were different. Her biggest hypothesis, of course, was that the story diverged only in Louiseâs sphere of influence.
The water festival that was held on the hottest day, for example. It was there that drunk mercenaries cut off the neck of a statue in the square. So far that was just like the original. However, in the novel it was Ian and Stella who solved the case, while here it was the knights of the imperial household. After that, events flowed just like the story, where the mercenaries were hit with tomatoes throughout the festival. The journey was different, but eventually the destination was the same.
Was this the power of conservation of the original world? Perhaps it wasnât changed because it was outside of Louiseâs sphere of influence.
This was going to be complicated.
âMiss, the Princeâs carriage has arrived.â
Yes, things were complicated thanks to the male lead who stepped on the original story. He trampled on it so strongly that other aspects not revealed in the original story were starting to show itself. Who would have known that the king and gentle Professor Lassen only intended to use Stella for her own purposes. And when things went wrong for Lassen, the way she treated Stella grew increasingly worse, to the point where she hit her on her cheek. Stella knew it was wrong, but now she couldnât escape her environment.
Louise knew the importance of oneâs environment and how it could change oneâs mind and personality. Stellaâs lies and frigid expression was a result of her surroundings, and Louise had contributed greatly to it. It saddened Louise that she was the one to push Stella down.
âI didnât mean it.â
Whether or not the perpetrator of the accident was Louise or Ian, it worried her. Louise went down the stairs murmuring an apology that wouldnât reach Stella. Beyond the wide open porch, there was a carriage waiting in the heavy rain.
*
*
*
âIs it okay for me to complain?â
Ian frowned lightly at the distance Louise was sitting opposite from him. It was too far. Too far that even if he stretched his arms he couldnât reach her.
âDonât hold it in.â
Louise responded with a grin, but the maid arrived and served them some tea, along with the cake that Ian brought as a gift.
âItâs a chocolate cake.â
Louise raised her plate with the cake and admired it.
âYes, itâs a tasty, sweet chocolate cake.â
âIs this the same cake as your birthday?â
âAre you serious? I made it.â
âYou?â
Louise looked at him expectantly, but Ian waved his hand lightly.
âIâm sorry if it doesnât live up to expectations, but I didnât learn how to make cakes because they werenât a survival food. â
âAhâ¦â
âAlright, Iâll learn. Is that fine with you?â
âWhat?â
âI will learn how to make cakes properly.â
âYou donât have to!â
Louise shook her head vigorously and hurried to get another forkful. It was so thick and delicious.
âItâs so good.â
âI suppose so.â
He pushed the cake in front of him towards Louise. Louise looked alternately between the cake and Ian. Then she laughed. She felt that her relationship with him had changed a little.
âDonât be too fond of this. Itâs nothing.â
He scratched his head as he looked at the rain splashing on the window.
âI like it. Besides, Iâve been really hungry for some reason.â
âI guess youâre on the last stage of growing up. Youâre finally going to grow taller. Remember to sleep well and eat a lot of meat.â
âWill I be as tall as the president?â
âThat would be nice.â
They could face each other easily and always have the same view.
âSo, say the magic sentence three times a day and eat meat.â
Louise didnât forget the magic sentence he had taught her. Tomorrow, she would eat good meat. It was a fine sentence to reflect upon. Not only did it give one the strength to live through the day, but it also gave some hope to tomorrow.
âEven while Iâm away.â
âWhile youâreâ¦away?â
âI have something scheduled outside the capital.â
A thin crease formed between Louiseâs eyebrows, as if she were worrying about something.
âIsnât it the rainy season?â
Louise was anxious because traveling by carriage was not safe during the rainy season. An accident could happen and the wheels could get stuck in the muddy ground.
âItâs because of the rainy season that I have this schedule.â
âAhâ¦â
Louise sighed in understanding. For years now Ian would go directly to the areas that were damaged by flooding. She was sure this was the case in the original story as well.
âEven though weâve been providing enough monetary support for years to prepare for the floods, the damages have never been reduced. My father ordered me to check it in person.â
Louise knew the truth. Every year the flood aid sent from the royal court was spent lavishly on gambling and horse racing by the culprits. So far they had avoided responsibility by manipulating the paperwork, but this time they wouldnât get away with it. Ian would expose everything and take away their estates and titles.
It was a sad episode, but as part of the readership Louise was waving her light stick.
âAnd I have to visit Count Lapis too.â
In the original novel Ian went to Stellaâs home. During the day he punished the family members that didnât like Stella, and at night they had a strong love affair. There was also an illustration where they kissed each other until they were out of breath. Louise couldnât help but stare at the image for about half an hour.
âIt was greatâ¦and the male lead was holding Stella by her waist!â
Louise looked down and gazed at Ianâs arm. Yeah, that arm. The illustration was even better because it detailed his muscles and veins. Wait. That meant in the future, that arm would one day be wrapped around a waist! Maybe Louise might be in the area when that happened.
âHuuuâ¦â
Louise gripped the arm of the sofa.
âYour face is red. Are you okay?â
âItâs okay! I was just thinking of something.â
âWhat were you thinking of?â
She couldnât say she was thinking of the passionate kiss scene, so she shook her head.
âLapisâs daughter was causing you trouble at the funeral. What a foul thing to do.â
âBut youâll still work fairly.â
âI will put aside my personal grievances, of course.â
âYouâll meet Stella, too.â
ââ¦Iâm not happy about it, but I will.â
What would happen this time? In the original story, Ianâs and Stellaâs relationship grew even deeper because of the floor damage, to the point that they desired each other even more. That was the conclusion of this episode. Louise thought about the festival and incident with the mercenaries. Although the course of events was different, the conclusion was the same as the original. So, this time?